Thera was basically two separate islands composed of a roughly circular inner one that was almost completely enclosed
by an outer island that ringed around it. The mostly flat plain of the inner island ranged from six to eight kilometers
wide. The outer ringing island was fourteen kilometers from east to west and eighteen kilometers from north to south. The
closest they came to touching each other was about four or five hundred meters. There was a single three kilometer opening
in the southwest of the outer island that allowed access to its interior from the open sea. The two islands were the
remnants of an ancient marine volcanic caldera. Any ships anchored inside the outer island were protected from all the winds
and rough seas beyond it. It was the finest natural harbor in the whole of the Aegean.

Minoan Depiction of the Ringed Islands of Thera
Akrotiri Miniature Frieze "Flotilla" Closeup Restoration
Late Bronze Age (LBA), Late Minoan I Period
The West House, Room 5, South Wall
Akrotiri, Santorini (Thera), Greece.

Thera was the largest Minoan commercial trading and manufacturing center outside of Knossos on Crete. The dockyards and
warehouses of the port city of over forty thousand people were located on the western side of the fifty square kilometer
inner island. The huge palace complex was about two and a half kilometers to the east of the port near the center of the
island. It stood proudly above the town on a low wide human-sculpted promontory that dominated the fertile plains of the
island.

Thera was an important naval base for dealing with the persistent problem of piracy especially in the northern seas. It was
strategically located in the south central Aegean within easy sailing distance of the Myceneans in the west, the Hittites
in the east, and the Trojans and Thracians in the north with a direct connection to Knossos in the south. Much of the trade
in the entire area, especially from the north, was shipped there for distribution to Knossos and far beyond. Products from
Thera found there way to the Egyptians and Kushites in the south, and the Canaanites, Hittites, and Assyrians in the east.

Present Day Thera
Santorini (Thera), Greece.

There were several towns and villages on the islands. The largest of these was the port city of Thera on the inner island.
The biggest town on the outer island was Therasia in the northwest. There was a causeway and bridge joining it to the inner
island. Therasia was about twice the size of Akrotiri in the south. Everyone else on the outer island had to take a short
boat or ferry ride to access the inner one.

With only about one hundred and sixty square kilometers of land, the two islands couldnít possibly support the population
of over one hundred and twenty thousand people living there. They were sustained by the influx of goods coming into its
ports. Large quantities of barley and wheat from the Thracian grain shipments were stored in huge warehouses for year round
processing and consumption.

The climate was generally dry with almost no rain in the long hot summers, but the mild winters could be quite wet. The flat
roofs of the buildings were slightly sloped to let the winter rains flow into terracotta drain pipes that filled their water
cisterns for storage. The harvesting of water was mandatory for every masonry structure on the islands. In times of drought,
water was imported like so many other things.

Wood for the numerous construction projects was mostly imported to save the sparse amounts of timber left on the island. The
islands would have been totally denuded of trees long ago if the administration hadnít stepped in and sharply regulated it
mainly for aesthetic reasons.

Akrotiri Archaeological Site
Akrotiri, Santorini (Thera), Greece.

The Therans practiced a very high level of animal husbandry, and animal stock was imported in great quantities for food. The
sheep, goats, pigs, and cattle were all domesticated and stabled or fenced outside the towns. Sheep and pigs were the staple
meat diet of the people along with some cattle, but goats and deer were also consumed. The goats and cows provided the
people with milk. Dried animal dung was used, as much as possible, to help fuel their braziers, kilns, and smelters. Much of
their clothing was spun and weaved from wool, and their shoes were made from leather.

Minoan Antelope Fresco
Late Bronze Age (LBA), Late Minoan I Period
Akrotiri, Santorini (Thera), Greece.

The animalís skins, sinews, and bones were used as raw materials for an extraordinary number of things. Shell, bone, horn,
and teeth were used to make tools, weapons, works of art, etc. Horn and sinews were used in making their bows, and oxhide
covered their shields. Boarís tusks covered their helmets, and leather was used in their body armor.

Panaramic View from Imerovigli
Santorini (Thera), Greece.

Thera was the leading manufacturing center of textile products in the Aegean. There were several factories employing
thousands of workers setup expressly to weave the sails of ships, clothing, and many other finished woolen and hemp
products. Many of the villas and homes on the islands had their own weaving looms. Ships loaded with bales of wool filled
the harbor to feed the factories. There was a significant sector of the workforce devoted to the production of fine jewelry
and pottery for export. The profits of trade and production filled the treasury with gold. The peopleís standard of living
was very high especially compared to the barbarian Myceneans in the west.

Calusetne had never visited Thera in the springtime before. It looked even more beautiful than he remembered from his
previous visits. His eyes were always drawn to the extraordinary red, black, yellow, and white layered rock pinnacles and
sheer precipices of the walls of the outer island ringing the large plain of the inner one. The fertile fields of the
islands were green expanses of mostly open pasture land. The grass and evergreen scrubs were dotted with patches of mainly
oak trees mixed with groves of olive trees, junipers, and vineyards. Moving among them were large flocks of sheep and goats
with smaller herds of cattle. Wild goats and deer lived in the hills of the outer island.

- Excerpt - "The Minoan Psychopath"

Bibliography:

Druitt, T. H. and Francaviglia, V. "Caldera formation on Santorini and the physiography of the islands in the late
Bronze Age". Bulletin of Volcanology, Vol. 54, No. 6, p. 484-493. 1992.

Travelers love to visit
Santorini because it is one of the most beautiful islands in Greece. There may be flights with
Business Class Deals from cities in Europe to
Athens or direct to Santorini. For those who would prefer not to
fly
business or economy class to Santorini, there is the option of taking a ferry from the port of Pireaus which is about an
hour from the Athens airport.